Local and
Officers To Meet Officers of
of the Ladies' auxiliary. Fra
ternal Order of Eagles, will meet
Thursday, July 21, at 8 p.m. at
the lodge hall, 217 West Main st.
Surgery Patients Commu
nity hospital reported this morn
ing that Mrs. Clyde Graham,
820 Summit ave., and Elmer
. "Waites, Central Point, are in
the hospital for surgery.
la Hospital Mrs. Elta Wat
tles, Gold Hill, was admitted
to Osteopathic hospital today
and will undergo surgery, the
hospital stated this morning.
Prayer Group A meeting for
prayer and Bible study will be
held Wednesday, July 20, at 9:30
a.m. .at Phoenix Presbyterian
church. Anyone interested is in
vited to attend. s
Overnight Guests Mr. and
Mrs. Rolland Anderton, Boise,
Ida., were overnight guests Sun
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
John Wubbels, Orchard Home
dr.
From Idaho Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Lant, Meridian, Ida., were
week end guests at the home
of Mrs. Lant's sister and brother-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W.
Russell, 302 Crater Lake ave.
Trades Council The Medford
Building and Construction
Trades council will meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday, July 20, at the
Labor temple, 24 South Grape
st., according to Secretary Alvin
D. York.
To Meet Get Together club
will meet Wednesday, July 20,
' at the Moose hall on Newtown
st. Dessert will be followed by
a business meeting during which
a club picnic will be planned
for Aug. 3.
Boy Escapes Medford fire
men made a run at 8:15 p.m.
vesterdav to the Jackson school.
where a small boy had been re
portedly trapped in a furnace
sawdust pit. The firemens re
port said that when they ar
rived, he had managed to climb
out and had gone home.
Man Injured! H. F. Cope, 24
Quince st., was taken to Com
munity hospital by Medford Am
bulance service last night after
a fall at the family home. Mrs.
Cope reported this morning that
' her husband suffered an injured
back when a stepladder on
which he was standing col
lapsed. . '
Worker Injured Ed Wat
son. 720 Park st., an employee
of Snider's dairy, was hospitali
zed at Sacred Heart this morn
ing after a minor accident at the
dairy plant.' Watson was knock
ed down when a stack of car
tons fell on his head, H was said.
He was taken to the hospital by
Medford Ambulance service.
Civil Service Jobs Openings
have been announced by the
United States government for
internal revenue service posi
tions, social workers, and for oc
cupational therapists. Persons
desiring to apply or learn more
about the work may do so by see
ing Chester W. Silliman, civil
service examiner, at the U.S.
Post Office.
-
Patients Reported Several
new patients were reported by
Sacred Heart hospital this morn
ing. In the hospital for medical
care are Cecil Ray Fuller,
Grants Pass: Mrs. Lloyd Hood.
Phoenix: Dennins Hisau, Wolf
Creek; Mrs. Paul Predgo, 12
South Orange st. and Mark
Johnson, 6 weeks, son of Mr
and Mrs. Harry Johnson. Cen
tral Point. Surgical patients re
ported were . Herman Heller,
Grants Pass; Bobby Moore, 6.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Moore. 511 Dakota ave.: Mrs
Archie Olson, 1023 Winchester
aVe.; and Ronald Malcolm, 5-
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs
Mack Malcolm, Brookings, Ore
TD"
fiLy
a
Tonite! FIRST S SIIOVO
A ROYAL ROMANTIC RIOT!
IFknniJ
imneess
TDUHOE lOBUK-SrlK IIUABIIE
IJLMkor Rank Oissaiatioa
A UiwwfMl-tattTiwHWMl
Personal
Leave Ted Karasti, Clats
kanie, has returned home after
visiting his sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kelley,
911 Casino rd. Also visiting last
week at the Kelley home was
John Gill of Portland.
Legs Broken Robert E. Dunn,
32, Ashland, suffered two broken
legs as a result of a logging acci
dent about 10:30 p.m. yesterday
in the Wagner Gap area. Dunn
is employed by McDonough Bros,
logging firm. He was taken to
Sacred Heart hospital by Med
ford Ambulance service.
At Seaside Mrs. Henry Val
entine, Barnett rd., and Mrs,
Lloyd Roberts. 324 South Grove-
land ave., left Friday for Sea
side to join Miss Eva Deis who
left here earlier, to vacation
there. The group plans to return
in about a month.
Visitor Leaves The Rev
Richard Murphy, head of the nu
clear physics laboratories at
Notre Dame university, Ind., left
the end of the week after visit
ing with the Rev. Nicholas Deis,
parish priest of the Sacred Heart
parish. The two have been
friends for many years.
Licenses Arrive A new sup
ply of 1953 Medford bicycle lic
enses has arrived at the Med
ford police department, and are
now available. The supply re
cently was exhausted and police
had several applications for new
licenses on file.
To Move Here Paul Pollock,
Santa Cruz, Calif., arrived Mon
day and will be associated per
manently with the offices of the
Commercial Finance company.
He will be here for about three
weeks, then return to Santa Cruz
to accompany his family here.
In the meantime he plans to lo
cate a residence for the family.
Meeting Held Ed Peot, dis
trict manager - of the Stanley
Home Products company, was
speaker for a meeting of Rogue
valley dealers held July 18 at
the Jackson hotel here. Eight
dealers attended. A branch meet
big will be held in Eugene July
25, with dealers from here at
tending. Intersection Mishap Cars
driven by Luther Vernon Owens,
414 Clark st, and Walter John
Siebert, Lomita, Calif, collided
yesterday afternoon at the inter
section of East Jackson and
North Front sts., according to
city police records. No citations
were issued, police said. There
were no injuries. -
Permits Issued Building per
mits have been issued to D. B.
Reinhart, 609 Dakota ave., for
the $1800 alteration of residence,
to A. E. Morris for the $11,000
erection of a store building at
618 South Riverside ave., and to
George W. Beers, for the $7000
erection of a residence at 368
Stewart ave.
.
Released by Hospital Mrs.
Helen Louise Benson, 177 Gar
field st., Ashland, was released
by the Community hospital yes
terday afternoon after treatment
for cuts and bruises after being
struck by a car driven by Wil
liam E. Driscoll, 506 South
Keeneway dr., according to the
Medford police department. Dris
coll was issued a citation for
failure to yield the right-of-way
to a pedestrian, police said.
- .
From Pittsburg Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Schroeder, Pittsburg,
Calif., former Medford residents,
left Monday after visiting rela
tives and friends since Friday.
They were en route home after
a two-month trip to Wisconsin
and other mid-western points.
Schroeder is a painting contrac
tor and Mrs. Schroeder former
ly was a secretary with the Cali
fornia Oregon Power company,
and she is a former president
of the Rogue Valley chapter of
the National Secretaries association.
l(DD
!LJ
Nevs About
Servicemen
AT SAN DIEGO
Warren L. Deckelman, a Navy
seaman recruit and son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. H. Deckelman, route
1, box 51-A, Rogue River, is
serving at the Navy training cen
ter at San Diego, Calif., as a
member of the drum and bugle
corps.
ATTENDS SCHOOL
John E. Busch, a Navy fire
man apprentice, is attending an
electrician's mate school at San
Diego Navy Training center. He
lives at Star route 1, box 70,
Trail.
ADVANCED
Robert B. McBeth, aerograph
er's mate first class and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Mc
Beth, Jacksonville, has been ad
vanced in rate to chief aero-
grapher while serving at the
Oakland Navy Air station, where
he has been working in weather
forecasting for the past seven
years. He received his initial
training at the weather school in
Lakehurst, N. J., prior to report
ing to the Oakland base. His
wife is employed at the Oakland
airport as a secretary and also is
a bookkeeper loi the special ser
vices department of the Navy
base.
Chief McBeth is instructing
10 enlisted men from various
states in the first session of an
accelerated 90-day intensive
training period in aerology. Golf
and gardening are outside pur
suits of the new petty officer, and
he also possesses a commercial
pilot's license and holds a rating
of flight instructor.
FROM KOREA -
Pfc. Charles H. McCallister of
Murphy who arrived in this
country in May from Korea now
is stationed at Ft. Carson, Colo.,
with the H and S company, 88th
EBC. He is an engineer heavy
equipment mechanic.
BILLETS OPEN .
Pay billets are open at present
for six men in the Naval reserve
here, according to E. V. Tate,
stationkeeper. Special opportuni
ties in regard to active duty will
be given men with prior Naval
service, Tate said.
RESERVISTS VOLUNTEER
Steven Sanders, son of Dr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Sanders, 6 South
Groveland aye., and Thomas
Poindexter, Medford, radarman
3rd class, have recently volun
teered for active service in the
U.S. Navy after a period of train
ing in the local Navy reserve.
Poindexter was recently ad
vancer! to the rats. Hp has hon
assigned to the Atlantic .fleet
TO JAPAN "
Robert E. Frick, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Trick, 910 Sun
set ave., is en route to Japan to
be assigned to service in Korea
for the next year or more. He is
an Army private and received
basic training at Ft Ord, Calif.
He enlisted in January and was
at Camp Gordon, Ga., before em
barking for Japan. Young Frick
worked for several summers at
the Boy Scout camp at Lake O'
Woods and was graduated from
Medford High school in 1954.:
' At Beach Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Leavitt and son, Alfred Leavitt,
returned home Sunday evening
after being for the week end at
Crescent City, Calif.
Santiam Bean Festival
To Start on July . 26
Stayton, Ore. (U.PJ The low
ly bean will come into its own
for five days starting July 26
as the 16th annual Santiam Bean
festival gets underway here.
The event will feature parades,
a talent show and a horse show
to say nothing of a bean feed,
a been queen and a bean hop.
Candidates for queen will be
required to make three-minute
talks extolling the virtues of
green beans.
Daily Vealher Report
DATE JULY 19. 19SS
SunMt tonight. 7:41 pjn.; sunrise to
morrow, 4:51 mja.
FORECASTS:
Medford and vicinity Fair and
warm through Wednesday. Low to
night 55; high Wednesday 95.
Western Oregon Fair tonight and
Wednesday, except -for - brief early
morning cloudiness and patchy fog.
Warmer Wednesday afternoon, ex
pected low 30-60; high Wednesday 83-
2 except 65-75 along coast.
Northern California Fair and con
tinued warm. Fog on coast.
LOCAL DATA:
TEMPERATURE: Ucaa yesterday
66: below normal 7. Record high this
date. 107 in 1946. Record low this date,
45 in 1932.
PRECIPITATION: Fast 24 noun
none. Total this month trace: .13 in.
below normal. Total since Sent. I
8.88 in.: 9.04 in. below normal.
Humidity:' Lowest yesterday 22;
highest tliis a jb. 77.
hich low pree.
Brookings 70 54
Crater Lake 66 41 '
Grants Pass 88 48
Klamath Falls SI 47
MEDFORD 86 54
Portland : 73 52
Seattle -Spokane
Yakima .
70 52
82 54
S3 54
Eureka
Red Bluff :
Sacramento ,
San Francisco
Los Angeles
60 55
96 61 '
. 91 56
66 51
87 64
Phoenix
Denver ..
Chicago .
100
. 89
. 86
. 88
. 75
60
71 .
73
76
77
Miami
.OS
New York
95
94
Washington. D. C.
FIVE DAX forecasts:
Western. Oregon Temperatures
above normal, highs in 80s.' lows in
50s. Little or no rain except scattered
showers about Saturday.
Northern California Possibility - of
a few scattered thundershowers in
higher mountains, otherwise no pre
cipitation. Coastal fog. Temperatures
below normal.
Pioneer Miner
At Jacksonville Dies
John W. Opp, 94, pioneer
Jacksonville gold miner, died in
a Portland hospital Thursday,
according to word received here.
He was born in Friendship,
Ind., on Oct. 2, 1861, and mined
in Montana for many years be
fore coming to southern Oregon.
In 1901 he married Rose Ries,
who survives.
: He purchased his .mine near
Jacksonville from C. C. Beek
man, pioneer banker, in 1901
and operated it at various inter
vals with extensive development
in more than 20 tunnels.
Other survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Fos
ter, and Mrs. Julia Johnson, both
of Portland, and Mrs. Jean
Crocker, Eugene; three grand
children and one great-grandchild.
Obituaries
ANDREW FREDRICKSON
Remains of Andrew F. Fred
rickson, 94, who died at the
home of his daughter, Gertrude
Fredrickson, 817V& West 10th
St., Monday, will be forwarded
to Essex, la., for services and
interment. Perl funeral home is
in charge of local arrange
ments. The deceased, a retired farm
er who had resided here for the
past three years, was born in
Sweden on April 22, 1861.
Survivors include four other
daughters, Mrs. L. L. Belknap,
Lincoln, Neb.; Alice Fredrick
son, Bemidji, Minn.; Annie
Fredrickson, Washington, D.C.,
and Mrs. Don Stromberg. Lin
coln. NELLIE LEES
Funeral services for Nellie
Piatt Lees, 73, of 520 West Jack
son st., who died Saturday, will
be held in Conger-Morris chapel
Wednesday at 10 a.m. with the
Rev. John Reynolds of the First
Presbyterian church officiating.
Committal will be at Siskiyou
Memorial park.
The deceased was born Jan. 3,
1882, in Gilmanton, Wis. She
was a teacher in the public
schools of Chicago for many
years, and had come to Medford
about two years ago from White
fish, Mont., to make her home
with her sister, Mrs. F. F. Mor
ris. :
Other survivors include two
brothers, Alexander W., Nichols,
N.Y., and Alfred T., Whitefish.
EILENE PERKETT
Funeral services for Eilene
Loretha Perkett, 4, of Tiller,
who died Saturday night, will
be held in Conger-Morris chapel
Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. with
the Revw Willard S. Fenderson
of the South Umpqua community
church officiating. Committal
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park. .
The deceased was born Oct.
31, 1950, in San Jose, Calif., and
had lived in Tiller for the past
three years.
Survivors include her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Eyvine T. Perkett;
a brother, Robert L.; and her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vir
gil Cox, Farmersville, Calif., and
Mrs. Mattie Perkett, Modesto,
Calif.
JILL PARISH
Private funeral services for
Jill Elaine Parrish, 13-month-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley G. Parrish, Route 2,
Box 434-B, who died at home
Monday, will be held at the
graveside in Jacksonville ceme
tery Thursday with Miss Sara
Walker, interim-pastor of the
Eastwood Baptist church of
ficiating. Chapel Mortuary is in
charge of arrangements.
The family requests that, In
stead of flowers, a contribution
be made to the American Can
cer society, in care of Mrs. John
S. Day, South Groveland ave.,
Medford.
The infant was born in Med
ford on June 18, 1954.
- Other survivors include two
brothers, Stephen Stanley, and
Nathan Andrew; four sisters,
Judith Elizabeth,. Julie Eve,
Janine Erin and Jerl Ellen; her
paternal grandfather, M. F. Par
rish, Chi co, Calif.; her parternal
grandmother, Mrs. Helen Gross,
Inglewood, Calif.; and her ma
ternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Hill, Central Point. .
To Get Polio Shots
Indianapolis (U.fi) Children
of Armed Forces personnel at
three bases in the United States
have been designated to receive
2,927 shots of anti-polio vaccine
shipped from here.
The serum was dispatched by
air yesterday from Eli Lilly Sc
Co., largest manufacturer of the
Salk vaccine. It was sent to the
St. Louis, Mo., Medical Depot
and to Navy medical supply de
pots at Oakland, Qalif ., and Bay
onne, N. J. f ,
O SMORGASBORD - $2.25
Includes Barbecued Spareribs
O WONDERFUL DINNERS
Special Prime Ribs of Beef .
O ALA CARTE MENU
HON diesis
FOR RESERVATIONS -
Flames Damage
Cabin in Court
A cabin in the James Lilly
court at the corner of Court
st. and McAndrews rd. was dam
aged by heat and smoke yes
terday evening, firemen report
ed, after a short circuit in a
refrigerator motor resulted in
a fire.
The flames extended over the
floor and wall of the room, and
the refrigerator was destroyed,
they said. A truck from the main
fire station with five men an
swered the alarm, at 8:40 p.m.,
and was in service for 51
minutes.
No damage was caused by a
grass fire at 4:59 p.m., reported
near the Economy Auction
house, 2284 Crater Lake high
way, firemen said.
Three, gas spills from over
flowing gasoline tanks of auto
mobiles parked in the downtown
area were flushed away by fire
men yesterday.
Fire Marshal Truman Nelson
made inspections following six
complaints of hazardous condi
tions in residential areas, and
checked a public garage and a
business occupancy. He issued
15 orders for correction of haz
ards. ' ' - -
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Professional
traders tested the stock mar
ket today and found that a sup
ply of offerings easily brought
prices down.
The losses generally . held
within narrow limits and
volume dropped from yester
day's pace.
Du Pont, the weak spot of the
day, touched 226 where it was
off 8 points. It met meager sup
port. Rails were supported after
losing as much as 3 points in
Union Pacific. . . .
Dow-Jones Averages
Dow-Jones final stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 456.72 off
3.35; : 20 railroads 156.93 off
1.13; 15 utilities 65.47 up 0.20
and 65 stocks 165.11 off 0.92.
Sales today were about 2,300,
000 shares against 2,160,000
shares yesterday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T .... 186Vi
Anaconda ... , 68?i
Chrysler 88
Curtiss Wright 19Vi
General Electric 52V4
General Motors . 12514
Montgomery Ward 81
Penn. R. R 27
Penney, J. C 93
Radio ; 49
Southern Co 19Vi
Southern Pacific . 61
S. Oil of Calif 90
Texas Gulf Sulphur 41
Transamerica 45
Tri-Continental 27VS
United Aircraft . , , . 68
U. S. Rubber . 46
U. S. Steel 52V4
Youngstown ... ; 87
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa baler,
f.o.b. trucks, Portland. $33.
Prices as reported by the TJSDA
market news service: Wheat No. 2 soft,
white. 874.25 ton; No. 2 white oats, 38
1b test. Coast delivery 851 30 a ton;
Portland delivery $50 ton; No. 2 West
ern barley 45-847 ton f.o.b. Portland
Coast delivery; new crop No. 2 West
ern barley $45 ton; soybean meal
$83.07 ton, cars, prompt delivery Port
land standard millrun. $47.50 cars; No.
2 yellow corn. Eastern shipping
points, 6950-87030.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Eggs: To retailers: Grade AA large
55c doz; A large 52-54c; AA medium
50-52c; A medium 49-51c doz:A small
38c doz; cartons 1 to 3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints 65c lb; cartons 66c; A prints 65c
cartons 66c: B prints 63c.
Cheese -To retailers: A grade Ched
dar, Oregon singles 42',j-45',ic; 5-lb
loaves 46',i-49'ic. Processed American
cheese 5-lb loaf 39',i-49',ie lb.
Farm Market
Red raspberries sold mostly at $2 25
a flat; best log an berries brought
growers mostly $2.00 while straw
berries were listed at 2 .25 -82.75 a flat;
moorpak and dryland apricots quoted
at 2-83.50 a 28-30 lb. lug.
Poultry, Rabbits .
Live Chickens To growers (No. '1
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers 2',i to
4 lbs. 28c; at farm 27-28c lb; light liens
17c; heavy hens all wta 18c up; - old
roosters ll-14c.
Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to
retailers: fryers. N. Y. style 42 -4 3c
lb; whole drawn S3-5Sc lb: cut up 87
60c lb; hens light type N. Y. style
28-29c; cut ups 40-44c; hens heavy
type N.Y. style 39-lc; whole draws
41-45C
, Turkeys To producers for A grade
young hens f.o.b. farm N.Y. dressed
33c; A toms N.Y. style 31c lb. To re
tailers: A grade young hens ready to
cook 50c; N. Y. dressed 37-38c lb; A
grade toms oven ready 41-45c: N. Y.
style 34-35c lb; fryer turkeys 4 to
lbs. 49-51c.
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing plants) Live, white S to 4
lbs 21-23c up; 3 to 6 lbs 17-lSc: col
ored pelts 4c under; old does 10-12c
lbe few higher: fresh dressed fryers
to retailers 37-61c; cut up 62-65c
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (UP) Cattle 300. Good
choice fed steers 21-824.25; good-low
choice heifers 20-822: canner-cutter
sows 8-810. few $1030; utility cows
11-812.
Calves 65. Good-choice vealers 18 50
$20; utilty down to $12.
Hogs 300. U.S. No. 1 and 3 butchers
180-235 lb 2030-821; some early lots
to $2125: No. 3 grades down to $20;
choice 350-550 lb sows 1230-815.
Sheep 500. Choice Iambs with some
prime $18; good-choice 1630-817.50;
cood-choice feeders $15: good-choice
ewes 3-8430. -
DINING INN
CENTRAL
POINT
Phone NOrmandy 4-2513
Tuesday. July 19, 2151
Cool Canadian Air
Brings Relief
To Sweltering East
By UNITED PRESS
Cool Canadian air spread over
New York and New England to
day, bringing relief from a heat
wave which has kept tempera
tures near 100 degrees.
The weatherman said the cool
front was poised along a line
extending across the upper Great
Lakes and might also cooloff
the muggy Midwest.
Rains in Southwest
Meanwhile, heavy rains hit
the Southwest and freak acci
dents attributable to the weather
claimed seven lives in Kentucky
and Louisiana.
. Creeks and rivers rose fast to
day in Western Texas, where
almost five inches of rain fell
in the past 48 hours. The dry
Big Bend country of Southwest
Texas took the brunt of the
downpour, and the rains were
expected to continue today and
tomorrow.
tornado Clouds Seen
Two tornado clouds 'were re
ported in Texas last night, at
Beaumont and Lamesa, but ap
parently never touched the
ground. Another tornado report
was received from Pratt, Kan.,
but no change occurred there
either. .'',
At Owensboro, Ky., three
teenaged caddies , . were killed
when lightning struck a large
tree under which they had
sought shelter from a sudden
thunderstorm.
Meanwhile, temperatures con
tinued cool in the Northwest but
sizzzled as usual in the far
Southwest. Readings were ex
pected to reach 100 or so in
Nevada and - Caliornia desert
areas. -' -
In the Vernon district of Los
Angeles, sea breezes dispelled
thick smog which almost caused
officials to declare an emergency
yesterday. . .
Hamilton Street Work
Started Yesterday
Grading operation began yes
terday on Hamilton st. between
13th st. and 106 feet south of
11th st., according to Vernon
Thorpe, city public works
director.
Clearing, operations nn the
street began about the ' middle
of last week and are almost
completed, Thorpe said. Work
on me concrete curbs and gut
ters began this morning.
The J. C. Compton company
or McMinnvuie, contractors, are
in cnarge or construction.
FREE DAVY CROCKETT Coon
Skin Hats to First 300 Kids
ON THE SCREEN
Shipwreck High Adventure On A South Sea Island!
A Real Thriller for the Kiddies '
"SWISS FAMILY
ROBINSON"
STABBING
THOMAS MITCHELL
and AllStar Cast
- '' . '. . , - .
3 -CARTOON HIT5-3
MEDFORD (OREGON)
Wafer System Work
Incorrectly Listed
A water system is under con
struction in the Wilson park sec
tion, not tne newly-annexed
Laurelhurst addition, as was in
correctly stated yesterday in the
Mail Tribune due to a reporter's
error. 1
Plans are already formulated
for a water system in Laurel
hurst, according to Robert Lee,
assistant city water superintend
ent. The system can be put in
after the property owners initi,
ate a petition and present it to
the city council, but a 20-day
referendum period following an
election is necessary before this
can be done, Lee said.
Construction on the water sys
tem on Loal st. in the Wilson
park area will be completed in
about two weeks, Lee added. M.
C. Lininger and Sons, contrac
tors, are doing the work.
Walter Norbtad's Son
Shoots Self in Foot
Salem -0J.PJ Alben Norblad,
a 16-year-old son of Oregon Con
gressman Walter Norblad, was
reported in good condition -today
from an accidental bullet
wound in the left foot. The youth
said he stumbled while hunting
squirrels near his home at Stay
ton Sunday and his .22 caliber
rifle discharged.
Cool, Crisp
SALADS
A Meal In
Hot Weather
Healthy and Appetizing
Chilled for IgJ fPK m and
Summer S)viJ Up
5
Freshness
The CLOCK
301 EAST MAIN
ASHLAND
mME
S plus y
eBaaaaVBaaaaaaaaaaaaaVBeaBeeeal I
ALL MPS!
Tomorrow
IT'S ANOTHER
BANG-UP
VLUU MsrtlliJK
at i p.n.
Doors Open at Noon .
IT'S FOR ALL KIDS!
There Is Still Time ;
to Join the Club and
Get in on all the
FREE PRIZES
Including the Free Trip
To DISNEYLAND!
MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN1
Hurt on Medford Visit
Grants Pass Mrs. J. E. Bart
lett, Grants Pass, is hospitalized
here from injuries received in a
fall in Medford Saturday. She
and her husband were attending
an Izaek Walton Lea sue conven
tion; and she was hurt while
shopping in an apparel store.
xne Hospital said her injuries
included an injured right knee
and a sprained left ankle. She
was brought to the hospital by a
irants pass ambulance.
BIRTHS
BAKFT Tn j -
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MORRIS To Mr. and Mrs.
David, rt l, box 76, Gold HilL
July 18, 1955. a girl, 7V4 pounda,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
"I couldnt lie down, tit or
walk without pain. A bam was
almost impossible," reports a
shingles victim. Learn all
about this mysterious disease
that can't be cured in "How it
Feels to Catch Fire." .
-AISO - Don't miss Babe Za
harias' own story of her grim
fight against cancer. Get your
copy of the Post today! ..
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Answering Your
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